释义 |
slice
slice S0472200 (slīs)n.1. a. A thin broad piece cut from a larger object: ate a slice of cheese; examined a slice of the diseased lung.b. An often wedge-shaped piece cut from a larger, usually circular object: ordered a slice of pie; shared a slice of pizza.2. A portion or share: a slice of the profits.3. a. A knife with a broad, thin, flexible blade, used for cutting and serving food.b. A similar implement for spreading printing ink.4. Sports a. The course of a ball that curves in the direction of the dominant hand of the player propelling it, as to the right of a right-handed player.b. A stroke that causes a ball to follow such a course: a golfer with a bad slice.c. A ball propelled on such a course.d. A stroke, as in tennis, in which the ball is struck with a downward motion with the open face of the racket in order to impart backspin. v. sliced, slic·ing, slic·es v.tr.1. To cut or divide into slices: slice a loaf of bread.2. To cut from a larger piece: slice off a piece of salami.3. To cut through or move through with an action like cutting: "where wheels have freshly sliced the April mire" (Robert Frost).4. To divide into portions or shares; parcel out: "With mortgage securitisation, a pool of home loans is sliced into tranches bearing different degrees of risk" (David Shirreff).5. To reduce or remove from a larger amount or entity: sliced 10 percent off the asking price.6. Sports To hit (a ball) with a slice.v.intr.1. To make a cut with a cutting implement: I sliced into the cake.2. To move like a knife: The destroyer sliced through the water.3. Sports To hit a ball with a slice.Idiom: any way/no matter how you slice it No matter how you look at it; no matter how it is analyzed. [Middle English sclice, splinter, from Old French esclice, from esclicier, to splinter, of Germanic origin.] slice′a·ble adj.slic′er n.slice (slaɪs) n1. a thin flat piece cut from something having bulk: a slice of pork. 2. a share or portion: a slice of the company's revenue. 3. (Tools) any of various utensils having a broad flat blade and resembling a spatula4. (Ball Games, other than specified) (in golf, tennis, etc)a. the flight of a ball that travels obliquely because it has been struck off centreb. the action of hitting such a shotc. the shot so hitvb5. to divide or cut (something) into parts or slices6. (when: intr, usually foll by through) to cut in a clean and effortless manner7. (when: intr, foll by through) to move or go (through something) like a knife: the ship sliced through the water. 8. (usually foll by: off, from, away, etc) to cut or be cut (from) a larger piece9. (tr) to remove by use of a slicing implement10. (Ball Games, other than specified) to hit (a ball) with a slice11. (Rowing) (tr) rowing to put the blade of the oar into (the water) slantwise[C14: from Old French esclice a piece split off, from esclicier to splinter] ˈsliceable adj ˈslicer nslice (slaɪs) n., v. sliced, slic•ing. n. 1. a thin, flat piece cut from something: a slice of bread. 2. a part or portion: a slice of land. 3. any of various implements with a thin, broad blade or part; spatula. 4. a. the path described by a baseball, golf ball, etc., that curves toward the side from which it was struck. b. a ball describing such a path. 5. a stroke executed by hitting down on a tennis ball with an underhand motion and thus creating backspin. v.t. 6. to cut or divide into slices. 7. to cut through or cleave with or as if with a knife. 8. to cut off or remove as a slice or slices (sometimes fol. by off, away, etc.). 9. to hit (a ball) so as to result in a slice. v.i. 10. a. (of a player) to slice the ball. b. (of a ball) to describe a slice in flight. [1300–50; (n.) Middle English s(c)lice < Old French esclice, n. derivative of esclicer to split up < Frankish *slitjan, akin to Old English slītan, Old Norse slīta (see slit)]; slic′er, n. sliceAn average logistic planning factor used to obtain estimates of requirements for personnel and materiel. (e.g., a personnel slice generally consists of the total strength of the stated basic combatant elements, plus its proportionate share of all supporting and higher headquarters personnel.)slice Past participle: sliced Gerund: slicing
Present |
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I slice | you slice | he/she/it slices | we slice | you slice | they slice |
Preterite |
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I sliced | you sliced | he/she/it sliced | we sliced | you sliced | they sliced |
Present Continuous |
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I am slicing | you are slicing | he/she/it is slicing | we are slicing | you are slicing | they are slicing |
Present Perfect |
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I have sliced | you have sliced | he/she/it has sliced | we have sliced | you have sliced | they have sliced |
Past Continuous |
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I was slicing | you were slicing | he/she/it was slicing | we were slicing | you were slicing | they were slicing |
Past Perfect |
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I had sliced | you had sliced | he/she/it had sliced | we had sliced | you had sliced | they had sliced |
Future |
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I will slice | you will slice | he/she/it will slice | we will slice | you will slice | they will slice |
Future Perfect |
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I will have sliced | you will have sliced | he/she/it will have sliced | we will have sliced | you will have sliced | they will have sliced |
Future Continuous |
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I will be slicing | you will be slicing | he/she/it will be slicing | we will be slicing | you will be slicing | they will be slicing |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been slicing | you have been slicing | he/she/it has been slicing | we have been slicing | you have been slicing | they have been slicing |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been slicing | you will have been slicing | he/she/it will have been slicing | we will have been slicing | you will have been slicing | they will have been slicing |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been slicing | you had been slicing | he/she/it had been slicing | we had been slicing | you had been slicing | they had been slicing |
Conditional |
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I would slice | you would slice | he/she/it would slice | we would slice | you would slice | they would slice |
Past Conditional |
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I would have sliced | you would have sliced | he/she/it would have sliced | we would have sliced | you would have sliced | they would have sliced |
sliceA badly executed drive where the ball curves to the right (in a right-handed shot) or to the left (in a left-handed shot).ThesaurusNoun | 1. | slice - a share of something; "a slice of the company's revenue"pieceshare, percentage, portion, part - assets belonging to or due to or contributed by an individual person or group; "he wanted his share in cash" | | 2. | slice - a serving that has been cut from a larger portion; "a piece of pie"; "a slice of bread"piecehelping, serving, portion - an individual quantity of food or drink taken as part of a meal; "the helpings were all small"; "his portion was larger than hers"; "there's enough for two servings each"cutlet, escallop, scollop, scallop - thin slice of meat (especially veal) usually fried or broiledfish filet, fish fillet, filet, fillet - a longitudinal slice or boned side of a fish | | 3. | slice - a wound made by cutting; "he put a bandage over the cut"gash, slash, cutwound, lesion - an injury to living tissue (especially an injury involving a cut or break in the skin) | | 4. | slice - a golf shot that curves to the right for a right-handed golfer; "he took lessons to cure his slicing"fade, slicinggolf shot, golf stroke, swing - the act of swinging a golf club at a golf ball and (usually) hitting it | | 5. | slice - a thin flat piece cut off of some objectpart, piece - a portion of a natural object; "they analyzed the river into three parts"; "he needed a piece of granite"section - a very thin slice (of tissue or mineral or other substance) for examination under a microscope; "sections from the left ventricle showed diseased tissue" | | 6. | slice - a spatula for spreading paint or inkspatula - a hand tool with a thin flexible blade used to mix or spread soft substances | Verb | 1. | slice - make a clean cut through; "slit her throat"slitcut - separate with or as if with an instrument; "Cut the rope" | | 2. | slice - hit a ball and put a spin on it so that it travels in a different directiongolf, golf game - a game played on a large open course with 9 or 18 holes; the object is use as few strokes as possible in playing all the holeshit - cause to move by striking; "hit a ball" | | 3. | slice - cut into slices; "Slice the salami, please"slice upcut - separate with or as if with an instrument; "Cut the rope" | | 4. | slice - hit a ball so that it causes a backspinstrike, hit - make a strategic, offensive, assault against an enemy, opponent, or a target; "The Germans struck Poland on Sept. 1, 1939"; "We must strike the enemy's oil fields"; "in the fifth inning, the Giants struck, sending three runners home to win the game 5 to 2" |
slicenoun1. piece, segment, portion, wedge, sliver, helping, share, cut water flavoured with a slice of lemon2. part, share, piece, proportion, allocation, allotment, tranche Fiction takes up a large slice of the publishing market.verb1. cut, divide, carve, segment, sever, dissect, cleave, bisect She sliced the cake.slice something off cut off, sever, chop off, hack off, shear off Slice off the stalks and bases of the courgettes.slicenoun1. The result of cutting:cut, gash, incision, slash, slit, split.2. A part severed from a whole:cut, piece, portion, section, segment.3. A thin piece, especially of tissue, suitable for microscopic examination:section.verbTo separate into parts with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument:carve, cleave, cut, dissever, sever, slit, split.Translationsslice (slais) noun1. a thin broad piece (of something). How many slices of meat would you like? 切片,薄片 片,薄片,切片 2. a part or share. Who got the largest slice of the profits? 部分,份 部分,份 verb1. to cut into slices. He sliced the sausage/cucumber. 切片 切片2. to cut (as) with a sharp blade or knife. The blade slipped and sliced off the tip of his forefinger. 切下 切下3. in golf etc, to hit (a ball) in such a way that it curves away to the right (or in the case of a left-handed player, to the left). (高爾夫球)削球 (高尔夫球)削球 sliced adjective (negative unsliced) cut into slices. a sliced loaf. 切成片的 刨切的,片状的 slicer nouncheese slicer. 乳酪片 奶酪片slice
sliceIn addition to the subsequent idiom beginning with slice, also see greatest thing since sliced bread; no matter how you slice it. See:- a piece of the action
- a piece/slice of the action
- a share/slice of the cake
- a slice of life
- a slice of the cake
- any way you slice it
- frog slicing
- greatest thing since indoor plumbing
- greatest thing since sliced bread
- greatest thing since sliced bread, the
- homeslice
- It’s been a slice!
- it's been a slice
- It's been a slice!
- no matter how thin you slice it, it's still baloney
- no matter how you slice it
- piece
- piece of the action
- slice
- slice in
- slice into (someone or something)
- slice of life
- slice of the action
- slice of the cake
- slice of the pie
- slice off
- slice the pie, to
- slice through
- slice through (something)
- slice up
- sliced bread
- the best thing since sliced bread
- the best thing since sliced pan
- the greatest thing since sliced bread
- whichever way you slice it
slice
slice1. any of various utensils having a broad flat blade and resembling a spatula 2. in golf, tennis, etc.a. the flight of a ball that travels obliquely because it has been struck off centre b. the action of hitting such a shot c. the shot so hit slice[slīs] (geology) An arbitrary section of some uniform standard, such as thickness of a stratigraphic unit that is otherwise indivisible for purposes of analytic study. (mining engineering) A thin broad piece cut off, as a portion of ore cut from a pillar or face. To remove ore by successive slices. slice
slice Drug slang An eighth of an ounce of marijuana (derived from pizza, which is generally divided into 8 slices). Imaging (1) CT term for a single-imaged region. (2) MRI term for the planar or selected image region.slice Imaging A popular term for a collimation scan interval in CT or equivalent in MRISLICE
Acronym | Definition |
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SLICE➣Soldier Level Integrated Communications Environment | SLICE➣South Carolina Longitudinal Information Center for Education | SLICE➣Stimulating Leadership in Cutting Expenditures Act (US) | SLICE➣Strengthening Local Independent Co-Ops Everywhere (Washington) | SLICE➣St. Louis Interfaith Community Explorations (Missouri) | SLICE➣Stateline Ice and Community Expo (Monroe, WI) | SLICE➣Streamlined Longitudinal Interval Continuation Evaluation (psychology) |
slice
Synonyms for slicenoun pieceSynonyms- piece
- segment
- portion
- wedge
- sliver
- helping
- share
- cut
noun partSynonyms- part
- share
- piece
- proportion
- allocation
- allotment
- tranche
verb cutSynonyms- cut
- divide
- carve
- segment
- sever
- dissect
- cleave
- bisect
phrase slice something offSynonyms- cut off
- sever
- chop off
- hack off
- shear off
Synonyms for slicenoun the result of cuttingSynonyms- cut
- gash
- incision
- slash
- slit
- split
noun a part severed from a wholeSynonyms- cut
- piece
- portion
- section
- segment
noun a thin piece, especially of tissue, suitable for microscopic examinationSynonymsverb to separate into parts with or as if with a sharp-edged instrumentSynonyms- carve
- cleave
- cut
- dissever
- sever
- slit
- split
Synonyms for slicenoun a share of somethingSynonymsRelated Words- share
- percentage
- portion
- part
noun a serving that has been cut from a larger portionSynonymsRelated Words- helping
- serving
- portion
- cutlet
- escallop
- scollop
- scallop
- fish filet
- fish fillet
- filet
- fillet
noun a wound made by cuttingSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a golf shot that curves to the right for a right-handed golferSynonymsRelated Words- golf shot
- golf stroke
- swing
noun a thin flat piece cut off of some objectRelated Wordsnoun a spatula for spreading paint or inkRelated Wordsverb make a clean cut throughSynonymsRelated Wordsverb hit a ball and put a spin on it so that it travels in a different directionRelated Wordsverb cut into slicesSynonymsRelated Wordsverb hit a ball so that it causes a backspinRelated Words |